ABSTRACT

Attachment Theory and Psychosis: Current Perspectives and Future Directions is the first book to provide a practical guide to using attachment theory in the assessment, formulation and treatment of a range of psychological problems that can arise as a result of experiencing psychosis.

Katherine Berry, Sandra Bucci and Adam N. Danquah, along with an international selection of contributors, expertly explore how attachment theory can inform theoretical understanding of the development of psychosis, psychological therapy and mental health practice with service users with psychosis. In the first section of the book, contributors describe the application of attachment theory to the understanding of paranoia, voice-hearing, negative symptoms, and relationship difficulties in psychosis. In the second section of the book, the contributors consider different approaches to working therapeutically with psychosis and demonstrate how these approaches draw on the key principles of attachment theory. In the final section, contributors address individual and wider organisation perspectives, including a voice-hearer perspective on formulating the relationship between voices and life history, how attachment principles can be used to organise the provision of mental health services, and the influence of mental health workers’ own attachment experiences on therapeutic work. The book ends by summarising current perspectives and highlighting future directions.

Written by leading mental health practitioners and researchers, covering a diverse range of professional backgrounds, topics and theroetical schools, this book is significant in guiding clinicians, managers and commissioners in how attachment theory can inform everyday practice. Attachment Theory and Psychosis: Current Perspectives and Future Directions will be an invaluable resource for mental health professionals, especially psychologists and other clinicians focusing on humanistic treatments, as well as postgraduate students training in these areas.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

Symptoms, functioning and aetiology

chapter 4|22 pages

Promoting recovery from negative symptoms

An attachment theory perspective

chapter 7|17 pages

The neurobiology of attachment and psychosis risk

A theoretical integration

part II|2 pages

Therapeutic approaches

chapter 10|17 pages

Cognitive Analytic Therapy (CAT) for psychosis

Contrasts and parallels with attachment theory and implications for practice

chapter 12|29 pages

Cultural variations in attachment and psychosis

The application of attachment theory to inform therapeutic work with Black Caribbean families

part III|2 pages

Individual and organisational perspectives

chapter 13|14 pages

Making sense of voices

Perspectives from the hearing voices movement

chapter 15|17 pages

The significance of the clinician’s felt experience

Using attachment theory to understand the therapist’s emotional experience when working with someone with psychosis